Abstract

Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) agonists such as dioxin have been associated with obesity and the development of diabetes. Whole-body Ahr knockout mice on high-fat diet (HFD) have been shown to resist obesity and hepatic steatosis. Tissue-specific knockout of Ahr in mature adipocytes via adiponectin-Cre exacerbates obesity while knockout in liver increases steatosis without having significant effects on obesity. Our previous studies demonstrated that treatment of subcutaneous preadipocytes with exogenous or endogenous AHR agonists disrupts maturation into functional adipocytes in vitro. Here, we used platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (Pdgfrα)-Cre mice, a Cre model previously established to knock out genes in preadipocyte lineages and other cell types, but not liver cells, to further define AHR’s role in obesity. We demonstrate that Pdgfrα-Cre Ahr-floxed (Ahrfl/fl) knockout mice are protected from HFD-induced obesity compared to non-knockout Ahrfl/fl mice (control mice). The Pdgfrα-Cre Ahrfl/fl knockout mice were also protected from increased adiposity, enlargement of adipocyte size, and liver steatosis while on the HFD compared to control mice. On a regular control diet, knockout and non-knockout mice showed no differences in weight gain, indicating the protective phenotype arises only when animals are challenged by a HFD. At the cellular level, cultured cells from brown adipose tissue (BAT) of Pdgfrα-Cre Ahrfl/fl mice were more responsive than cells from controls to transcriptional activation of the thermogenic uncoupling protein 1 (Ucp1) gene by norepinephrine, suggesting an ability to burn more energy under certain conditions. Collectively, our results show that knockout of Ahr mediated by Pdgfrα-Cre is protective against diet-induced obesity and suggest a mechanism by which enhanced UCP1 activity within BAT might confer these effects.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA cluster of conditions (i.e. increased blood pressure, high blood sugar, central adiposity, elevated cholesterol or triglyceride levels) that increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and type II diabetes [1], has increased dramatically in the past several decades in the U.S and worldwide leading to enormous health-related costs [2, 3]

  • Metabolic syndrome, a cluster of conditions that increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and type II diabetes [1], has increased dramatically in the past several decades in the U.S and worldwide leading to enormous health-related costs [2, 3]

  • We used a previously described Plateletderived growth factor receptor alpha (Pdgfrα)-Cre system that has been shown in lineage tracing studies to be active in preadipocyte lineages in order to test the function of the Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) in preadipocytes [44, 46]

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Summary

Introduction

A cluster of conditions (i.e. increased blood pressure, high blood sugar, central adiposity, elevated cholesterol or triglyceride levels) that increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and type II diabetes [1], has increased dramatically in the past several decades in the U.S and worldwide leading to enormous health-related costs [2, 3]. Adipose tissue is critical for normal metabolism and its dysfunction plays an essential role in the development of metabolic syndrome [4,5,6]. Adipose tissue is much more diverse than previously appreciated and brown, white, and beige adipose tissues play distinct roles in energy homeostasis. Over-accumulation of triglycerides in mature white and brown adipocytes causes them to become hypertrophic, inflammatory, and pathological

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